Computer related:

  • Don’t be your family computer savy guy, you just found yourself a bunch payless jobs…
  • Long desks are cool and all, but the amount the space they occupy is not worth it.
  • Block work related phone calls at weekends, being disturbed at your leisure for things that could be resolved on Mondays will sour your day.

Buying stuff:

  • There is expensive because of brand and expensive because of material quality, do your research.
  • Buck buying is underrated, save yourself a few bucks, pile that toilet paper until the ceiling is you must.
  • Second hand/broken often means never cleaned, lubricated or with easy fixable problem.
106 points

Proof-read your writing; even when writing titles.

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25 points

hahah, noted.

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5 points

Titles can be edited on Lemmy.

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3 points

A good exercise is to read your essay from the bottom up. Start at the last complete sentence and when you’re done read the one above. You’ll catch more things that way because your mind has to change the perspective.

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3 points

I change the font and size, it snaps my brain out of “I already know this text has no errors, I’ve been looking at it while writing it” mode and allows it to more easily read it anew

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76 points

One that sticks with me from chemistry classes: “Hot glass looks exactly the same as cold glass.”

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26 points

Another from chemistry: “small dangers are still dangers, don’t underestimate them”.

This was in my first uni. The person saying that mentioned how he never saw students harming themselves with cyanide, nitration solutions (sulphuric+nitric - highly corrosive and explosive) or the likes. No, it was always with dumb shit like glacial acetic acid skin burns, or a solvent catching fire.

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13 points

Reminds me that this is the same logic I use on the road.

As a motorcycle rider I’ve become a very cautious car driver.

I’m a paranoid driver and I always assume that people on the road are always going to do something stupid. I’m wrong most of the time and I don’t mind that but whenever I happen to avoid an accident because I was too careful, it reminds me why I’m always paranoid.

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10 points

A girl in my chemistry class learned that the hard way. I have never seen a burn blister form so fast.

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61 points

Read the entire error message very carefully before asking for help, or even searching for a solution.

For folks in tech this means reading and understanding the stack trace, too.

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3 points

Only works for software that tells you the problem…

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1 point

1 that is true

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3 points
*
Deleted by creator
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3 points

And often it’s very easy to understand if you break down the components.

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53 points

You don’t have to have an opinion about everything.

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17 points

i disagree.

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6 points

That’s quitter talk!

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2 points

Corralary would be “It’s fine to admit I don’t know”. Being open to my ignorance and blind spots allows me to learn. This is good advice to everyone, but especially to those who are used to having a lot of knowledge, or at least think they do.

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1 point

Lemme guess, blackbird for a wife?

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-9 points

All the people up voting this just don’t get it.

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51 points

When driving don’t be nice, be predictable.

Eg.: If you are on the priority road, drive - don’t be nice and slow down to let someone in from a side road. That’s how you get rear-ended.

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2 points

This is really good advice I also want to emphasize this when it comes to motorcycles for the love of God just take your turn at stop signs and lights do not wave them on. I have been apart of and seen people almost die from it.

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2 points

In Portland, these “polite” drivers WILL STOP for people who want to cross in the middle of the street.

It drives me insane as a pedestrian.

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3 points

I’m in Portland as well, and as a cyclist, it annoys me no end when a driver with no stop sign stops and waves me through my stop sign. I call them “niceholes”.

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1 point

Quick question, you American? If yes; well, duuh

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0 points

I think they probably meant Portland, Kazakhstan.

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1 point

My main transport is a bicycle. I do my best to be predictable, and obvious about it. And when someone tries to ‘be nice’ and let me go first when it’s not my ‘turn’ / right of way, I start with all sorts of body language that says I’m not moving till after you do. Put my foot down, look at the sky, look 180 degrees away from the ‘nice’ car, look in the direction the ‘nice’ car is supposed to go, point in the direction they are supposed to go, shake my head point at the ground, cross my arms, etc, etc till they give up and just go. I’ve even had the opportunity to verbally explain the importance of predictability and Right of Way, but it usually doesn’t go that far. LoL, we all just want to get where ever in the heck we are trying to get to, after all.

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